C-reactive protein and cardiovascular risk in the general population
European Heart Journal

Abstract
High-sensitivity C-reactive protein (hsCRP) is a marker of inflammation and predicts cardiovascular (CV) risk in individuals without known atherosclerotic CV disease (ASCVD). More information about its clinical relevance will help evaluate the general utility of hsCRP as a routine clinical biomarker to identify patients at residual risk.
In this population-based study, hsCRP was measured in 448 653 UK Biobank participants without known ASCVD. The association of hsCRP with major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE), CV death and all-cause death was assessed using Cox proportional hazards models.
The cohort had a median age of 57 years, 55.4% were female, and median hsCRP levels were 1.32 mg/L. A repeat hsCRP measurement in 15 967 participants after 4.4 years showed long-term stability. In covariate-adjusted models individuals with hsCRP levels >3 mg/L had a 34% higher risk of MACE, a 61% and 54% increased risk of CV death and all-cause death compared to those with hsCRP <1 mg/L. Subjects with hsCRP levels ≥2 mg/L vs <2 mg/L had a 22% increased risk of MACE, and a 37% and 34% higher risk of CV death and all-cause death. The association of hsCRP with all endpoints was consistent across subgroups. Predictive performance of hsCRP ranked above conventional risk factors. Integration of hsCRP improved SCORE2 and provided a total net reclassification improvement of 14.1% for prediction of MACE.
These data confirm hsCRP as a clinically relevant predictor of CV events in individuals without known ASCVD and support its assessment in primary prevention.
Contributors

Alexander Gombert
Author

Christopher B Fordyce
Author

Neha J Pagidipati
Author

Viviane Rocha
Author

Marat Fudim
Author

Abhinav Sharma
Author

Michael Lehrke
Author

Kai M Schneider
Author

Hiroaki Shimokawa
Author

Jens Spiesshoefer
Author

Giovanna Liuzzo
Author

Andrea Milzi
Author

Lale Tokgozoglu
Author

Filippo Crea
Author

Thomas F Lüscher
Author
Royal Brompton and Harefield NHS Foundation Trust London , United Kingdom of Great Britain & Northern Ireland

Peter Libby
Author

Paul M Ridker
Author

Carolin V Schneider
Author

Florian Kahles
Author




